Tutorial Team 6, 15.04

By

Luz Quintana-Abraham

,

Amelie Proksch

and

Julia Klimowska

,
Ann

Marshall Rosenberg

NONVIOLENT COMMUNICATION

How can we Create a Physical Space for Difficult Conversations ?

APPLYING RESEARCH ON DESIGN

EXPERIMENTS:

We gave up on the idea of the Veil between the users talking

“I want to stay, to listen to you”.

WHAT WE WANT

  • enclosed seating space for two acquainted people
  • a neutral “space within a space” that removes hierarchy and ownership, creating shared ground
  • setting that helps create comfortable, easy intimacy
  • invites open conversation and preventative confrontation
  • no set hierarchy between users
  • adjustable seating to support individual preferences (height, position, direction)

FURTHER SKETCHES:

TESTING SHAPES & SEATING:

What Shaped Space is suitable?

Weighing the Importance of Proximity

Playing with Adjustability

WHAT WE ARE STILL FIGURING OUT

  • How can we best translate our communication research into practical applications within our project?
  • Finding the sweet spot between universal and personal approaches to meaningful conversations – balancing diverse user needs while designing an experience that naturally invites deep, one-on-one exchanges

QUESTIONS

  • How can we embed guidelines for productive conversations into the design without overwhelming users with instructions?
  • How can we embed a sensory feature into the object that supports users during difficult conversations—providing a calming effect while remaining cohesive and purposeful within the overall design?

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